Page 6 THE BATTALION FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1978 Battalion Classified Call 845-2611 MANOR EAST 3 THEATRES MANOR EAST MALL BURT REYNOLDS Goldie Hawn Chevy Chase “THE ENO* PG A PARAMOUNT PICTURE United Artists L 7:25 9:45 J 7:15 9:35 a Jerome Heilman Production a Hal Ashby Film /# ,n / " (^c/ha^rwh^ Screenplay by Waldo Salt and Robert C. Jones story by Nancy Dowd Director of Photography Haskell Wexler Associate Producer Bruce Gilbert m Produced by Jerome Heilman Directed by Hal Ashby United Artists 7:20 9:40 J FRI.-SAT. MIDNIGHT ALL SEATS $1.50 JOSEPH E. LEVINE MIKE NICHOLS LAWRENCE TURMAN proouction ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST DIRECTOR MIKE NICHOLS 1967 GRADUATE AN AVCO EMBASSY FILM ANNE BANCROFT^ DUSTIN HOFFMAN • KATHARINE ROSS SCR££NPLAYBY SONGS BY CALDER WILLINGHAM ^BUCK HENRY PAUL SIMON PERFORMED BY PRODUCED BY SIMON .-oGARFUNKEL LAWRENCE TURMAN DIRECTED BY MIKE NICHOLS TECHNICOLOR' PANAVISION' COMING OCT. 20-21 EXCLUSIVELY IN DOLBY STEREO A NOW STORY WITH NOW MUSIC! the movie coming at you at the speed of sound MICHAEL BRANDON'EILEEN BRENNANALEX KARRAS-CLEAVON LITTLE MARTIN MULL'CASSIE YATES |;EEl LINDA RONSTADT and JIMMY BUFFETT EM title soni) tomposei) oyrny and peiloimed by fcimki 'UK ' MidR 'Wm -i □ □ DOLBY STEREO . - ■ Skyway Twin WEST AT LAST, AT LAST PLUS THAT TENDER TOUCH EAST BURT REYNOLDS IN HOOPER PLUS GATOR Campus « 466512 COLLEGE STATION i FRIDAY & SATURDAY MIDNIGHT ADMISSION $2.00 HEAVEN CAN WAIT A PARAMOUNT PICTURE $750 to Aggie engineer student Campus Names Corps seniors given 13 ROTC awards Robert Falk, a senior engineering major from Conroe has won a $750 scholarship from the Society of American Military Engineers. Falk was named the scholarship recipient at the Wednesday night meeting of the Texas A&M University society post. The Texas A&M SAME chapter was presented with the Distin guished Student Post Award. Gen. Andrew T. Rollins, an engineering consultant for the Alaskan Pipeline, spoke on the construction of the pipeline. Rollins presented the check to Falk, a member of Squadron Four of the Corps of Cadets. The scholarship is awarded based on need and individual merit. Potential recipients must submit an application and be members of the post in good standing. Applicants are then screened by the post board, said Maj. Gary Cooper, a board member. “I was nervous when I first appeared before the board,” said Falk, “I didn’t know whether I would make it or not.’ Falk said he paid most of his college expenses on his own. He said he had to work during the summer and sometimes during the school year in order to do so. After graduation Falk plans to get his master’s degree and enter the Air Force on a delayed enlistment program. There he hopes to be involved with engineering research and development. The Distinguished Student Post Award was given to Texas A&M’s chapter by the national post in New York City. The award is based on the overall membership of the student post and the number of ac tivities it has for its members. Mike Barringer, president of the Texas A&M post, accepted the award. It is the eighth time in 10 years Texas A&M has received the award, of which five are given out annually. Barringer said, “It makes everyone feel good to get this kind of award. We probably get it more than any other student post in the country. That’s probably due to the activites, such as field trips, that we have for our memberss.” He said last year the post made trips to Virginia and to the NASA center in Houston. Thirteen seniors in the Corps of Cadets have been named Dis tinguished Air Force ROTC stu dents. The distinction recognizes ex cellence in summer camp per formance, grades in aerospace studies or the student’s academic major, and evaluation of instruc tors. Cited were Alberto D. Cuel lar of Laredo, Robert L. East of Marshall, Mark A. Gable of Bel ton, Craig E. Gontarek of Richardson, Stephen D. Green- wade of Dallas, and Lee G. Haefner of Mankato, Minn. Also included were Mark Hryhorchuk of Bridge City, Michael K. Inman of San An tonio, Thomas E. Muschalek of New Braunfels, Bill G. Ridgway of Avinger, Paul B. Shannon of Maxwell, Robert J. Simmons of Manchaca, and Neal E. Socha of San Angelo. The scholarship is presented annually and memorializes the late Army Chief of Staff Farrell is an Army ROIC cadet from Lubbock, and is majoring in microbiology. H* will be given $1,000 each of the next two years. The award will he presented Tuesday in Washington, D C. at the annual convention of the As sociation of the United States Army. Col. E.F. Faust (U.S. Army, ret.) senior vice president of the National Bank of Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, will give Farrell the award. Recipients of the award are chosen on the basis ol achieve ments in the ROTC program and recommendation by their profes sor of military science. Bockris will deliver a U Oxford University duril presentation ceremonies J held March 29-30, Pair invited to a J Congressional gru M| >t»P ftllll Itpl John Bockris to win medal for research Steven Farrell wins Abrams scholarship Steven E. Farrell is one of two cadets chosen from a nationwide group as a winner of the Gen. Creighton W. Abrams Schol arship Award. Prof. John Bockris of the chemistry department in March will be awarded the Medal of the Electrochemistry Group of the Faraday Division of the London Chemical Society. The award, given for elec trochemical research, is interna tional and is usually awarded to persons outside of the United Kingdom. As a part of the award. Dr. P.L. Adkisson A&M University’s vicem, for agriculture and renew: sources, and D r . ul Thomas, Texas Agricultu? tension Service entomol have been invited tosen e visers to analyze “All Pest Management Strat, the U.S. Congressional Technical Assessment. Adkisson is serving three-member panel, “So Experts in Pest Manaeem™- i Thomas is chairmanil U l Southwest U.S. Cotlotff Field Crops Working CrJ ' U Bum Sandra PhillipsgJfifth prize for leadedftj Sandra Phillips, geoloa dent at Texas A&M Unite r0 P was presented theTexasOi Gas Corporation’s Lead: Award Sept. 13 at thecomf headquarters in Dallas The award is presented year to students with outsta scholu achievements leadership qualities. M .. ... ..... ; . rry Jobs at sea plentiful TMA grads in deman ■ f‘: TACOS AL CARBON .'••V- STEAKS MEXICAN STYLE ’’ ; -. :; 11:00 A.M. - 10:00 P.M. CLOSED MONDAYS r—Hlghway 30 (Huntsville Hwy.)^rz^ v; V'CoDege Station, Texas ";>f •''/f'.C-693-5169 V-V.v : ’f v ' ■Ljj:—* • • • . . "P 1; in. Christopher Kent Mantooth graduated from Texas A&M Univer-: sity’s Moody College last May and immediately went to work as one of the best-paid members of America’s class of 1978. H e was different from a lot of graduates. Mantooth had a job in the bag. His base pay for the first year will be in the $30,000 range. With a lit tle overtime, he could gross be tween $3,000 and $4,000 a month. Mantooth is not an engineer or a petroleum geologist. He signed on as third mate aboard the Cove Trader, a large tanker ship. The Metairie, La., native graduated from the Texas Maritime Academy, a part of Moody College, entering a buyer’s job market, “The maritime fields are wide open,” said the superintendent of the Texas Maritime Academy, Adm. Kenneth G. Haynes. “Starting salaries for new graduates are often in the $25,000 bracket annually. Qbc) INTERSTATE UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER 846-6714 & 846-1151 CINEMA l&ll University Square Shopping Center 846-6714 & 846-1151 Universal Pictures and Robert Stigwood A NORMAN JEWISON Film 44 JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR 49 Friday -Saturday Midnight All Seats $1.25 n 11 ii n ii i iiiminmrrO The greatest demand is for graduates who are licensed to go to sea, he added. However, the oppor tunities are not limited to deepwater shipping. Other oppor tunities are growing as a result of the burgeoning offshore oil drilling industry along te Gulf of Mexico. The offshore energy industry is an open field, the admiral said. In creasingly it has become necessary to license all people who operate commercial vessels at sea. For that reason, there will he a growing de mand for maritime graduates who want to work in offshore drilling op erations, he said. “There is a training demand, an education demand, a people de mand — right now 3,000 people could be added to the Gulf Coast offshore shipping industry' from de ckhands to captains,” said Haynes. Haynes, who joined the Texas Maritime Academy in June after serving 35 years in the U.S. Navy, said the academy “is fully sub scribed, limited only by living space.” More than 140 cadets live aboard the training ship, Texas Clipper, which serves as a dormitory while in port and 70 more live in Moody Col lege dormitories. There are 25 women cadets. “I feel we are in a dynai tion. The college and the* are growing just as fast as build dormitories for newsti He explained that tobefe by the U.S. Coast Guard and women cadets must the Moody College campus the school year. The reason for the resi quirement, Haynes said.istl vidual who is going to seak crate effectively in a doseif situation, sometimes undei sure. If they are not trained those conditions, they may happy with a career at sea, tended. Looking ahead in the nt fields, the admiral said the gree program could be ms administration. “It’s one field that w meet the needs of the Gil shipping industry and thei offshore energy industry Haynes. He added that Moody Cd not just the Texas Ml Academy. It is composediJ divisions: the TMA, the| Zone Laboratory and the Sd Marine Technology. All *1" under the administration Texas A&M University Systi Fi ‘Middleman’ tvilll win bicycle race By KEITH TAYLOR Battalion Reporter There is a nip in the air, the leaves are beginning to change color, and the birds are heading for .a warmer climate, which can mean only one thing. It is time once again for the Half-fast Hundred. For the uneducated, the Half-fast Hundred, or Son of Half-fast obc) INTERSTATE pVT-fT «NTtR 846-67)4 & 646-1)5)' litt theatre group sales tickets WILL BE ACCEPTED nri-i.iuai'f.v TsnnMn F > s EEgmi ■ Jesus Christ Superstar Daily 5:45 7:40 9:45 TLS to 6:15 DRESS OPTION A TOCA NOT toca not lb REQUIRED! F F IN MIDU •CLinn. .r- ... I K If Jm SI !!! “'° H A?” 001 - IF y 0U-RE IN court)'M IF YOtritE OUT OF COLLEGE, IF YOU'VE EVER HEARD . OF COOKE, A NATIONAL LAMPOON ^ FAN, A SATURDAY NIGHT UVE FAN » TO'r. i.M k, ^ wild «dk, t humof ' you will Havt . iMfhmt rood bmc H Anim*l Houw " covr sp Natinnal I-AMPO«NV animal iHHgg m 111.,,, Hundred as it is being cat year, is a 100-mile bicycll sponsored by the Texas A& versity Wheelmen. In this race, first place thing and last place does not The person finishing in tn e receives a trophy. Whoever closest to the average time] first and last place finishes winner of the race. It isscj 1 way because 100 miles is a® to pedal a bicycle, so a mode 1 " ing pace is being encourage 1 The race has other benel apparent at first glance. The tants will be able to observe the beautiful, but humble ® Roans Prairie, Plantersvr e, bin, Anderson and Carlos. Brent Johnson, president 3 club, recommends that con 1 have a 10-speed bicycle works), a spare or tube, a tire and a water bottle. He said the club will have Wagon” to carry tools-, '' a _ fruit. The car will also pn- cyclists that cannot finish t ] Johnson said t ^ e ! e , V c) entries last year and about 35 this year. Somec J are coming from the e " Austin State Universr y clllh. I,.; Registration for the iace 7:30 a.m. Saturday by Tower fountain. event should begin by 8 a. is a one dollar t Wheelmen, and a 50-ce club members. Sun Theatres 33,3 University ( The only movie in low Double-Feature Every Week Open 10 a.m.-2 a.m. Mon.-Sat. 12 Noon - 12 Midnight Sun No one under 18 Escorted Ladies Free BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS